(Bloomberg) -- The Middle East’s biggest aluminum producer said it may take as long as a year to restore full output at its Abu Dhabi plant, following an Iranian attack a week ago.
Emirates Global Aluminium said the Al Taweelah smelter went into emergency shutdown, after suffering significant damage from missiles and drones. The company has completed an initial damage assessment of the facilities in the United Arab Emirates and is in contact with customers whose shipments may be impacted, it said in a statement Friday.
The Middle East accounts for about 9% of global aluminum production, but the impact of the war is being amplified because constraints on output elsewhere have eroded inventories, leaving the market with little buffer to cushion any shocks. Even before the attacks on EGA’s facilities, the industry was bracing for more production cuts as Strait of Hormuz disruptions affected the flow of raw materials for the region’s plants.
“To resume operations at the smelter, EGA must repair infrastructure damage and progressively restore each of the reduction cells,” the company said in the statement. “Early indications are that a complete restoration of primary aluminum production could take up to 12 months.”
Aluminum prices have climbed more than 10% on the London Metal Exchange since the start of the Iran war.
Al Taweelah is one of the world’s biggest smelters, producing 1.6 million tons of cast metal in 2025. Other facilities at the site in Abu Dhabi, including an alumina refinery and a metals recycling plant, could resume some production earlier, pending a final damage assessment, EGA said.
Read: Top Gulf Aluminum Producer EGA Halted Output After Iran Strike
“We are working directly with customers whose deliveries might be impacted by the situation at Al Taweelah,” EGA Chief Executive Officer Abdulnasser Bin Kalban said in the statement.
Iran also hit Aluminium Bahrain’s smelter in the Persian Gulf on March 28. The company known as Alba said it’s assessing damages.
--With assistance from Julian Luk.
(Adds detail on damage from second paragraph, company comments from third.)
More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com
©2026 Bloomberg L.P.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
Step by step instructions to Show Children the Significance of Appropriate Handshaking - 2
The largest sun of 2026 rises today as Earth draws closest to our parent star - 3
Civilian toll mounts in Iran as war presses on - 4
2026 will be the year NASA astronauts fly around the moon again — if all goes to plan - 5
Artemis II astronauts race to set a new distance record from Earth and behold the moon's far side
Limited Rain Chances in Brazil Boost Coffee Prices
$1,000 bribes, Mormon momfluencer mixers and making content to get plastic surgery: The wildest things I learned reporting my book
Posts falsely claim Netanyahu video fabricated to cover up his death
How did humans evolve, and will we evolve more?
10 Activities to Lift Your Consume and Bust Your Stomach
Exploring the Market: Unsold Rams May Be Less expensive Than You Naturally suspect
Bolsonaro briefly leaves Brazilian prison for medical tests after a fall from his bed
Insane Realities That Will Make You Reconsider How you might interpret History
Manual for Financial plan Agreeable PC













